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  • Dual AGP?

    It is my understanding that due to the way that an AGP port is connected to a CPU, it is restricted to only one AGP per motherboard.
    Is it possible for a dual CPU motherboard to support two AGP cards?
    Workhorse Athlon 1GHz, G400MAX
    Gamebox Athlon 1.3GHz Gforce3

  • #2
    You are wrong...

    AGP is connected to the North Bridge or Integrated Memory Controller. It depends on the chipset's architecture...

    However, some AGP adapters use a bridge to put more than two devices on the same card.

    ------------------
    Celeron 300P@558/2.0v, P3B-F, G400DH/32MB@148/166.5

    P4-2.8C, IC7-G, G550

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    • #3
      PCI is a bus architecture.
      AGP is based upon PCI, but it is a point to point architecture. That is why it is much harder to put a second AGP slot into a system than another PCI slot.
      If you want another AGP slot you have to add ~100 extra connections to your chipset. Not fun.
      I'd still like to read the warp specs for the G200 and G400.

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      • #4
        The AGP is cool because it doesn't share the bus.
        Adding secondary AGP slot to MOBO which shares the same bus would be contraproductive.
        ABIT BX6v2
        Celeron300A@450
        Alpha PAL6035, 27CFM fan
        64MB SDRAM 6ns
        G400 16MB DH
        Yamaha DS-XG
        Hitachi GD2500BX+

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        • #5
          Perhaps this article from Tom's Hardware will help explain this:
          http://www7.tomshardware.com/mainboa...214/index.html

          In a nutshell, AGP is a port (one device) where PCI is a bus that supports multiple devices. The AGP is integrated into the northbridge of your motherboard chipset. Dual CPU mobo's still have only one northbridge.

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